It may be surprising, but YOU elect the VP. It is all up to you and other people around you.
The people
US citizens who are registered to vote elect delegates to the Electoral College, and the Electoral College elects the president and VP.
The electoral college elects the president.
president elects the lt governor
The electoral college elects the president.
A voter votes and elects people into office.
That depends on what VP. You could be talking about the VP of a paper company or the VP of The United States Of America.
Austria elects a President.
The House of Representatives elects the President, and the Senate elects the Vice President.
the vp of the senate
Director is generally equivalent to AVP. Next is VP and 1st VP is higher than VP but lower than SVP. Strangely enough for companies that have 2nd VP, it is generally lower than VP.
Ideally, the people of the US elect their officials, but technically the "Electoral College" elects the President and VP. ------------------------ Each state gets a number of "official" votes called electoral votes. The size of the population in each state determines how many votes each states get. (Each state has the number of "electoral votes" equal to its number of US Senators and US Representatives combined.) Depending on how the people of the state vote (i.e Democrat or Republican), the Electors (people chosen on the ballot) cast their votes for each candidate. Some states divide their votes, but most are "all or nothing" for the prevailing party. The people's votes are called the "popular vote", and it has occurred that candidates with more "popular votes" have actually lost. (e.g. in 1888 - see link)